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BB
for Economical Transportation
K V
The World’s Lowest Priced
QUALITY Automobile
Mich.
New Superior Model Breaking All Sales
Records of Standard Fully Equipped Cars
This leadership has come only from sheer superiority in value
per dollar of price. Price, operation and maintenance considered,
your dollar buys the most transportation in a Chevrolet.
Equipment and accessories considered, Chevrolet is the lowest
priced car made.
Chevrolet is ALL THERE as sold—nothing more to buy but
the license, gasoline and oiL
Comparisons Sell Chevrolet
Standard Rear Axle Construction.
Strong, Quiet Spiral Bevel Gears.
Standard Transmission—three
•peed* forward and ona reverse.
Standard Braking System— foot
service brake, hand emergency brake.
Standard Electrical System—Start
er, storage battery, electric lights.
Standard Cooling System— pump cir
culation, large, honey-comb radiator
•nd fan.
Standard Doors —tiro on roadster
coupe, and light delivery, four on
touring and sedan.
Demountable Rima —with extra rim.
Chevrolet Motor Company, Detroit, Michigan
Division of General Motors Corporation
World’s Largest Manu- There are 5,000 Chevrolet Applications will be Considered
facturer of Low Priced Dealers and Service Stations from High Grade Dealers in Ter-
QUALITY Automobiles Throughout the World ritories not Adequately Covered
Dealer Inquiries Should Be Addressed to
Chevrolet Motor Company
445 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Georgia
"Good
to the
Last
Drop’
Eyes of Youth.
Wood —There Is no accounting for
youthful impulses.
Park —Meaning what, may I In
quire?
“In a movie comedy the other day
1 saw a big lion chasing one of the
slapstick artists —”
“Uh, huh—”
“And a little kid In the audience
yelled, ‘Run, lion, run.’ ”
The manufacture of wooden heels
in Chile is an industry of increasing
Importance.
| a Gives New Life to Old Stockings
■ V V Putnam Fadeless Dyes—dyes or tints as you wish
yv ©nuLTOHne YEARS
■■■in । ■ I,—। >" ' ■—
I t '■ f
Standard Instrument Board—speed
ometer, ammeter, oil pressure gauge,
lighting and starting switch, and
choke pull.
Standard Type of Carburetor, with
exhaust heater.
Powerful, Valve-In-Head Motor—
the same type as used in successful
cars selling at much higher prices.
Many Other Advantages which will
be noticed on inspection, comparison
and demonstration.
Investigate the Difference
Before You Buy
Thyroid for the Bald.
How baldness was cured by doses
of thyroid gland is described in tht
Lancet by Dr. H. W. Barber, physi
cian in charge of the skin depart
ment at Guy’s hospital. A Dutch girl
who had suffered from almost com
plete baldness for several years was
given ten grains of thyroid gland dally
for several weeks. As a result hair is
now growing freely over the whole of
her scalp.
Persian women are not permitted to
wear hats.
THE BULLETIN, IRWINTON, GEORGIA.
Ejoogf
—U
MARKET SEASON FOR GUINEAS
Latter Part of Summer and Through
out Fall Is Best Time to Dis-
pose of Fowls.
The marketing season for guinea
fowl Is during the latter part of sum
mer, and throughout the fall. At this
time the demand in the city market
is for young birds weighing from one
to two pounds each. At about 2^
months old guineas weigh from one
to 1% pounds, and at this size they
begin reaching the markets in Au
gust As the season advances the de
mand is for heavier birds.
The usual practice in marketing
I game birds is to place them on the
market unplucked, and In most mar
kets guineas are sold this way. They
appear more attractive with feathers
on, and sell more readily. Dressed,
the small size and dark color of the
skin are likely to prejudice the pros-
IW^ls^
w .i
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V -Ar* ■
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I’ M IHpk- V ; V
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WH IhHo ’ /
Guineas Are Usually Placed on Market
Unplucked.
pectlve customer who may be unfa
miliar with the bird's excellent eat
ing qualities. For hotel and restau
rant trade, however, guineas should
be dressed in the same way as com
mon fowl. Better ask the dealer, be
fore shipping, whether he wants the
feathers on or off.
If the feathers are to be left on
the birds all that is necessary in pre
paring for market is to bleed them
by severing the principal blood ves
sels of the neck, allowing them to
hang head downward until bleeding
is complete.
If the feathers are to be removed
it should be done by dry picking. When
the brain is pierced after severing
the blood vessels in the neck the
feathers are loosened by a convulsive
movement of the muscles and can be
removed easily.
DEMAND IS FOR WHITE EGGS
An Exceptionally Keen Sense of Taste
Would Be Required to Note
Any Difference.
It would take an exceptionally keen
sense of taste to distinguish any dif
ference between white and brown eggs
at breakfast, but human beings are
such faddists that, in the opinion of
some, the difference is there just the
same. In New York the demand is
for white shells, while in Boston the
brown egg is just as popular.
“Some men will have only Dutch
Belted cattle or Hampshire hogs,”
said one of the poultry specialists in
the Department of Agriculture. “They
are color enthusiasts. The liking for
white-shelled eggs may have grown
from associating the egg with the
white poultry, an agreeable picture
suggesting cleanliness. Actually, how
ever, the brown-shell egg is every bit
as good as the white until you arrive
at the price in New York. The differ
ence there sometimes is considerably
in favor of the white.”
At present all the general purpose
breeds of chickens are layers of
brown eggs. Some of the leading mar
kets demand the white egg, however,
and as the price favors the white
product it is important to supply it If
possible and at the same time produce
a fowl having weight in meat.
MjMgfl
The busy hen is the one that makes
the best layer.
* * *
It pays to feed the young fowls lib
erally until they are full grown.
* • •
Be kind to your fowls; make friends
with them and they will repay you.
Fright reduces the egg yield.
* * *
Exercise makes the hens lay better,
Insures fertile eggs and makes the
chicks grow strong and healthy.
• • •
Make the nest boxes of ample size,
but not too deep. The hens, if large
in size, will break the eggs In getting
into the nest if it be too deep.
* * *
t
A hen too closely confined soon be
comes restless and uneasy. Restless
ness results in discomfort and the de
velopment of such vices as egg-eating,
’eather-pulling and cannibalism.
No Thanks, I Must Have
CALUMET
The Economy BAKING POWDER
—Never fails to produce pure
and wholesome bakings. (
—You save when you buy it
You save when you use it
—ls you buy big can or cheap Lwn
baking powder you don t get
the Calumet quality.
BEST BY TEST
The World’s Greatest Baking Powder
CANADA HAS STEADY GROWTH
Recent Census Shows Healthy In
crease in Population, Despite
Losses Caused by War.
Canada's census for 1921 indicated a
total population of 8,769,489, distrib
uted as follows: New Brunswick, 387,-
839; Nova Scotia, 523,837; Prince Ed
ward Island, 88,615; Quebec, 2,349,-
067; Ontario, 2,929,054; Manitoba,
613,008; British Columbia, 523,363;
Yukon, 4,162; Northwest territories,
6,684, and Canadian navy, 485. The
gain for the whole Dominion during
1910-1920, was 1,600,000 or 21.5 per
cent. The war cost the lives of 56,680
Canadians killed In action, while 40,-
000 more died from indirect causes.
The percentage increase in population
is the same as that for Australia, while
the Increase for New Zealand 20 per
cent was very little behind. In the Union
of South Africa the increase was 19.2
per cent. The Prairie provinces made
the most pronounced gain in Canada,
Alberta showing a 55 per cent in
crease ; Saskatchewan over 53 per
cent, and Manitoba, 33 per cent. For
the next ten years the unit of distribu
tion for determining the membership
of parliament will be 36,250. This total
is arrived at by dividing by 65 the
popu>tion of each province.
Describing Him.
“How Is your new hired man, Les
ter?”
“He’s the kind of a feller,” replied
Fanner Flumlegate, “that when he
sets down is entirely unmoved by crit
icism.”—Kansas City Star.
rawJS*/ w Ah At '\S§s£S^^
Back to the
Grain Fields
j^wMuLyi for Health
C* RAPE-NUTS is a regular “three
‘W b a s s h^” of the best food quali-
^ulUr ' • ties °f whole wheat flour and malted
barley, carefully mixed and slowly
baked —
To develop all their appetizing flavor,
To preserve all their wholesomeness,
And to provide nature’s “broom” that keeps the diges
tive system spick and span.
There’s not a bit of artificial sweetening in Grape-Nuts
—it just becomes sweet of its own accord in the long baking.
And that enticing flavor—how good it is with good milk
or cream! Fruits, too, fresh or cooked, add to the delight of
a dish of Grape-Nuts, morning, noon or sundown.
It is a compact, ready-to-eat food—no cooking needed.
Why not try it for tomorrow’s breakfast?
“There's a Reason**
Postum Cereal Co., Inc., Battle Creek, Mich.
V/. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 30—1922, _
' GOLD TEETH OUT OF STYLE
Present Trend Is to Preserve Tooth
and Make It Look as Much Like
Original as Possible.
Gold teeth are going out of style,
according to practitioners and dental
experts. The present trend is to pre
serve the tooth to make it look as
near as possible like it was originally.
If this can’t be done the offending
molar or incisor must be pulled out.
The Idea of pulling teeth is some
thing comparatively new in American
dentistry. The tendency was to save
the tooth at ail costs. But dentists
have discovered that gold crowns are
unhealthful and permit foreign matter
to get into the teeth.
Bridge work also is not as popu
lar as it once was. To make a bridge
two good teeth were filed down as
anchors for the mass of gold in be
tween. If the bridge failed the two
good teeth on the ends went with it.
Now dentists recommend a plate of
false teeth instead of the bridge.
These being removable, are easily
kept clean. The dental science is now
spending its energies more on serv
iceable plates rather than on bridges
or crowns. —New York Sun.
Going Down.
Blackstone —Is your wife still re
ducing?
Webster —If you mean my income—
yes!
Expert Aviators.
Wise —Doesn’t time fly quickly!
Hub —Yes, and money Is a good sec
ond down here at the seashore.
: WOULD TAKE MANY HEARSES
' —
Firms That Have Died Since Drop in
Prices Would Make Large
Funeral.
Suppose a funeral passed your
house with 38,000 hearses, each hearse
containing an American business firm.
। It would be impressive, wouldn’t it?
It would also give you an accurate
idea of the number of business fail
ures since prices began to tumble In
May, 1920, notwithstanding they
haven’t tumbled so very much for some ;
things. But don’t get gloomy over it
Standing on curbstones watching their I
brethren go to Dun & Bradstreet’S
• cemetery, are nearly 2,000,000 business
organizations that have weathered the
storm. In two years of severe de
pression only one business in every
fifty-three has failed. The percentage
of farmers that have gone broke is
larger. Business failures have totaled
about $600,000,000 a year in liabilities.
Assets have averaged about enough to
pay 50 per cent on the dollar. The net
loss has been about $300,000,000 a
year, or about $3 a year for each Amer
ican, flight be much worse, remarks
Capper’s Weekly.
There With Advice.
“I knew it would happen!” ex
claimed Mr. Grumpson.
“Well?”
“After reading one issue of a radio ,
magazine he thinks his middle name is
Marconi.” —Birmingham Age-Herald.
No fewer than 20 women now hold
seats In the national law-making body
of Finland.